Gore Vidal’s
Article of
Impeachment
By
Gore Vidal
16/06/08 "Truthdig"
- - -11/06/08 --
- On June 9,
2008, a
counterrevolution
began on the
floor of the
House of
Representatives
against the gas
and oil crooks
who had seized
control of the
federal
government. This
counterrevolution
began in the
exact place
which had
slumbered during
the all-out
assault on our
liberties and
the Constitution
itself.
I wish to draw
the attention of
the blog world
to Rep. Dennis
Kucinich’s
articles of
impeachment
presented to the
House in order
that two
faithless public
servants be
removed from
office for
crimes against
the American
people. As I
listened to Rep.
Kucinich invoke
the great engine
of
impeachment—he
listed some 35
crimes by these
two faithless
officials—we
heard, like
great bells
tolling, the
voice of the
Constitution
itself speak out
ringingly
against those
who had tried to
destroy it.
Although this is
the most
important motion
made in Congress
in the 21st
century, it was
also the most
significant plea
for a
restoration of
the republic,
which had been
swept to one
side by the mad
antics of a
president bent
on great crime.
And as I
listened with
awe to Kucinich,
I realized that
no newspaper in
the U.S., no
broadcast or
cable network,
would pay much
notice to the
fact that a
highly respected
member of
Congress was
asking for the
president and
vice president
to be tried for
crimes which
were carefully
listed by
Kucinich in his
articles
requesting
impeachment.
But then I have
known for a long
time that the
media of the
U.S. and too
many of its
elected
officials give
not a flying
fuck for the
welfare of this
republic, and so
I turned, as I
often do, to the
foreign press
for a clear
report of what
has been going
on in Congress.
We all know how
the
self-described
“war hero,” Mr.
John McCain,
likes to snigger
at France, while
the notion that
he is a hero of
any kind is what
we should be
sniggering at.
It is Le Monde,
a French
newspaper, that
told a story the
next day hardly
touched by The
New York Times
or The
Washington Post
or The Wall
Street Journal
or, in fact, any
other major
American media
outlet.
As for TV? Well,
there wasn’t
much—you see, we
dare not be
divisive because
it upsets our
masters who know
that this is a
perfect country,
and the fact
that so many in
it don’t like it
means that they
have been
terribly spoiled
by the greatest
health service
on Earth, the
greatest justice
system, the
greatest number
of occupied
prisons—two and
a half million
Americans are
prisoners—what a
great tribute to
our penal
passions!
Naturally, I do
not want to
sound hard, but
let me point out
that even a
banana
Republican would
be distressed to
discover how
much of our
nation’s
treasury has
been siphoned
off by our vice
president in the
interest of his
Cosa Nostra
company,
Halliburton, the
lawless gang of
mercenaries set
loose by this
administration
in the Middle
East.
But there it was
on the first
page of Le
Monde. The House
of
Representatives,
which was
intended to be
the democratic
chamber, at last
was alert to its
function, and
the bravest of
its members set
in motion the
articles of
impeachment of
the most
dangerous
president in our
history. Rep
Kucinich listed
some 30-odd
articles
describing
impeachable
offenses
committed by the
president and
vice president,
neither of whom
had ever been
the clear choice
of our sleeping
polity for any
office.
Some months ago,
Kucinich had
made the case
against Dick
Cheney. Now he
had the
principal
malefactor in
his view under
the title
“Articles of
Impeachment for
President George
W. Bush”!
“Resolved, that
President George
W. Bush be
impeached for
high crimes and
misdemeanors,
and that the
following
articles of
impeachment be
exhibited to the
United States
Senate.” The
purpose of the
resolve is that
he be duly tried
by the Senate,
and if found
guilty, be
removed from
office. At this
point, Rep.
Kucinich
presented his 35
articles
detailing
various high
crimes and
misdemeanors for
which removal
from office was
demanded by the
framers of the
Constitution.
Update:
On Wednesday,
the House voted
by 251 to 166 to
send Rep.
Kucinich’s
articles of
impeachment to a
committee which
probably won’t
get to the
matter before
Bush leaves
office, a
strategy that is
“often used to
kill
legislation,” as
the Associated
Press noted
later that day.
